Lin Tian gave him something else.
He stepped in on the next exchangeânot meeting force with force, but closing distance until Qiu Renâs refined movements had less space to unfold. Lin Tianâs elbow snapped forward, then his sword hilt followed immediatelyâtwo small, brutal impacts.
Qiu Renâs breath hitched.
He stumbled back half a step.
Lin Tian didnât chase. He kept his stance grounded, aura compressed, sword held loosely but ready.
Xueya stood behind him, still and cold, her eyes like winter.
Qiu Ren wiped his lip with his thumb. A faint smear of blood appeared.
His smile vanished.
"Interesting," he murmured. "Youâre controlling your aura like a sect disciple."
Lin Tianâs voice stayed even. "Are you done?"
Qiu Renâs gaze sharpened again, and his aura surged for a heartbeatâjust a heartbeatâtrying to force Lin Tianâs instincts to respond.
The trace at Lin Tianâs wrist twitched sharply.
Lin Tian felt it like a cold needle pressing under the skin.
Instead, he moved.
One step.
A short, clean cut of his bladeânot aimed to kill, only to
end
.
The sword tip stopped at Qiu Renâs throat, a hair away.
The air went still.
Qiu Ren froze.
Lin Tianâs breath was steady.
His wrist trace settled again, dormant.
Qiu Renâs eyes flicked to the blade at his throat, then to Lin Tianâs face.
He laughed softlyâquiet, almost impressed.
"Alright," he said. "You can stand."
Lin Tian didnât lower the sword immediately. "Leave."
Qiu Ren raised his hands slowly. "I will."
He stepped back, then bowed toward Xueyaâthis time deeper, more genuine.
"Senior Sister," he said. "Your... choice is interesting."
Xueyaâs voice was flat. "Get out of my sight."
Qiu Ren smiled faintly and vanished into the shadows, moving so lightly he might have been part of the night itself.
Silence returned.
Only then did Lin Tian lower his sword and exhale.
The moment he relaxed, he felt it through the Link.
A faint pulse from Xueya.
Something like... tight emotion that had nowhere to go.
Lin Tian turned to her.
"You sensed it?" he asked quietly.
Xueyaâs eyes were sharp. "Yes."
He didnât lie.
"Theyâre testing me," Lin Tian said. "Not officially. Quietly."
Xueyaâs jaw tightened, anger cold and controlled.
"They didnât even wait until morning," she said.
Lin Tian looked down at his right wrist.
Under the lanternless darkness, there was nothing visible.
But he could feel it.
The trace.
He hesitated, then spoke with careful honesty.
"Elder Shen left something on me," he said. "A mark. An observation trace."
Xueyaâs eyes widenedâjust a fractionâthen narrowed with fury.
"She marked you," she whispered.
Lin Tian nodded once.
"She wants to know what I am," he said. "Or what Iâm doing."
Xueyaâs fingers clenched around her sleeve.
"They treat you like a thief," she said quietly, voice trembling with anger. "As if you can only exist by stealing."
Lin Tianâs gaze lifted to hers.
"Iâm not stealing from you," he said.
"I know." Her voice came fast, fierce. "I know that."
She took a breath, forcing herself to cool.
Then she stepped closerâclose enough that her cold aura brushed his skin.
Lin Tian didnât step back.
Her hand rose and touched his wrist.
The moment her fingers made contact, the trace reacted.
A thin chill pulsed beneath his skinâthen softened, as if confused by her presence.
Xueya felt it too. Her eyes flashed.
"It recognizes me," she murmured.
Lin Tianâs throat tightened.
"Resonance," he said softly. "Thatâs what Elder Shen called it."
Xueyaâs fingers stayed on his wrist. Her touch was cool, grounding.
"They will use this," she said.
"Yes."
She lifted her eyes.
"Then we cut the leash," she said.
Lin Tian let out a slow breath. "Not by ripping it."
Xueyaâs expression sharpened.
He continued, quieter. "If we tear it out, it alerts her. The system says it will."
Xueyaâs eyes flicked. "The system?"
Lin Tian froze for a heartbeat.
Too late to pull back now.
He didnât give details. He didnât expose the whole truth. He simply offered the part that mattered for survival.
"A method," he said carefully. "Something I can sense. It warned me not to purge it forcibly."
Xueya stared at him for a long moment, then nodded slowly.
She didnât demand more.
She didnât push.
She simply accepted that Lin Tian had somethingâsome mechanismâhelping him understand danger.
"Then we cut it the right way," she said softly.
Lin Tian nodded. "By control. By masking. By becoming stable enough that it canât find anything unusual."
Xueyaâs lips pressed together.
"And by making them realize," she whispered, "that taking me away will not fix anything."
Lin Tianâs chest tightened at that.
He reached out and covered her hand where it rested on his wrist.
A simple touch.
Not hidden now. There were no elders here, no envoys, no servants.
Just them.
"Xueya," Lin Tian said quietly. "When you return to Azure Snow..."
Her eyes sharpened. "You will come."
It wasnât a question.
Lin Tianâs throat tightened.
"Yes," he said. "I will."
Her gaze softened for half a heartbeat.
Then she leaned inâforehead brushing his shoulder, the same fragile gesture from before.
Lin Tianâs hand moved to her back automatically, holding her gently.
Her breath warmed his collar for a moment.
"I hate them," she whispered.
Lin Tian closed his eyes.
"I know," he murmured. "But weâll use their rules against them."
She lifted her head slightly, eyes narrowing.
"What do you mean?"
Lin Tian exhaled.
"They want tests," he said. "They want proof. They want stability."
He looked down at his wrist again.
"Fine," he said softly. "Iâll give them stability so clean they canât call it theft."
Xueya stared at him.
Then, slowly, a thin line of fierce satisfaction appeared in her eyes.
"Good," she whispered.
They returned to the guest courtyard together, moving quietly through the paths. The compound slept, but Lin Tian felt eyes in the darkness now. Not always real eyesâsometimes just the paranoia of being under a sectâs shadow.
At the gate, Xueya stopped.
"Tian," she said softly.
He looked at her.
Her expression was calm, but her eyes held warmth that had nothing to do with frost.
"Be careful," she murmured. "They will provoke you again."
Lin Tian nodded. "I know."
She hesitated.
Then she lifted her hand and brushed her fingers lightly along his sleeveâa whisper, a promise, a quiet comfort.
"Tomorrow," she said, "if they test you again... donât fight alone."
He let out a soft breath. "I wonât."
She stepped inside.
The gate closed.
Lin Tian stood there for a moment, staring at the wood, feeling the faint pulse of the Link even at this distance.
Then he turned and walked back toward his courtyard.
But he didnât sleep.
Not yet.
He went inside, sat on his bed, and called the system again.
[ External Signature â Analysis ]
State: Dormant
Note: Mark Activity spiked during conflict
Cause: Aura variance + emotional fluctuation
Recommendation: Increase control. Reduce variance.
Lin Tian stared at the panel, then spoke quietly.
"How do I remove it without alerting her?"
A pause.
Then:
[ Condition: Removal is possible after Host reaches stable threshold ]
Option A: Natural Dissolution via Qi Purification (Slow)
Option B: Purifying Resource (Herb/Artifact) to dissolve signature
Option C: Overwrite via higher-grade Physique awakening (Risky)
Lin Tianâs eyes narrowed.
Purifying resource.
His mind immediately went to one person.
Elder Mei.
Her medicinal garden.
The herbs she cultivated with obsessive care.
If anyone in Cloudcrest had something that could erase a trace without violent disruption, it was her.
And if Elder Mei learned a sect elder had marked a Lin clan young master like property...
Lin Tianâs mouth tightened.
She might pretend calm.
But she would not like it.
He dismissed the system panel and leaned back, staring at the ceiling.
A soft knock came at his courtyard gate.
Lin Tianâs eyes sharpened instantly.
He rose, moved silently, and opened the gate a crack.
A Lin servant stood there, face pale, holding a small sealed note.
"Young Master," the servant whispered. "This arrived just now. It... it was left without a name."
Lin Tian took it.
The seal wasnât Lin.
It wasnât Bai.
It was a simple stamp of snowflake wax.
Azure Snow.
His stomach tightened.
He shut the gate and broke the seal.
Inside was a single line, written in clean, elegant script.
"Tomorrow at dusk. Come alone to the medicinal garden. If you wish to keep what you claim as yours, learn how to survive our shadow."
No signature.
But he could already guess who it was meant to echo.
Elder Shen.
Or someone acting for her.
Lin Tianâs fingers tightened until the paper creased.
The trace at his wrist pulsed faintly, as if amused.
Lin Tian stared at the message for a long moment, then lowered it slowly.
In the quiet of his courtyard, he spoke the words aloud.
"So thatâs how it is."
They didnât just want to test him in open daylight.
They wanted to pull him into the dark where rules blurred.
They wanted to see if he would panic.
If he would reach for power.
If the trace would scream.
Lin Tian exhaled and closed his eyes.
He thought of Xueyaâs hand on his wrist.
Her anger.
Her fear of losing choices again.
Then he opened his eyesâcalm, sharp, resolved.
"I wonât be dragged," he murmured. "Iâll walk in on my own feet."
He sat back down, crossed his legs, and began to circulate his qi again.
To become so controlled that even a sectâs shadow couldnât make him flinch.
Outside, Cloudcrest slept under a cold sky.
Inside, Lin Tian trained under the quiet weight of a mark that didnât belong to him.
And tomorrowâ
someone intended to tighten the leash.
End of Chapter 39